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Apple is within touching distance of becoming the world’s first trillion-dollar (£750bn) company after technology stocks reached a record high.

The iPhone maker’s market value passed $950bn for the first time, a day after the company’s annual software conference at which it unveiled a series of updates analysts said would help it maintain its grip on users.

It came as the MSCI global technology index, a basket of IT shares, reached a record high and technology shares in Europe reached a level not seen since the dotcom boom in 2001.

Stronger than expected sales of the iPhone at the beginning of the year, as well as the continued support of legendary investor Warren Buffett, have led Apple’s shares to climb by 18pc this year. The company has brushed off fears that the iPhone X, the £999 handset it released in November, has sold poorly.

Analysts had predicted that a so-called “supercycle” increase in iPhone sales, driven by booming demand for the more expensive new models, would push the company over the $1 trillion mark. Although this has failed to materialise, with iPhone sales rising by just 3pc in the most recent quarter, rewards for shareholders and better sales of its other products have brought it close to the milestone.

Last month it unveiled a $100bn share buyback and a 16pc increase in quarterly profits, with growth driven by software sales and accessories such as the Apple Watch.

It has been racing rivals including Google’s parent company Alphabet, Amazon and Microsoft to the milestone, but the nearest company in terms of market value, Amazon, lay at around $815bn on Tuesday.

On Monday, Apple had unveiled a string of software updates at its annual Worldwide Developers’ Conference. The new version of the iPhone’s operating system will include features that limit the amount of time users can spend on their devices, performance upgrades and enhancements to Apple’s “Siri” virtual assistant.

The company also limited how websites such as Facebook can track users’ browsing habits, drawing a line between itself and advertising-funded internet companies. Richard Windsor, an analyst at Edison Investment Research, said the company could “sit out the uncertainty presented by the current backlash against the use of data for monetisation purposes”.